THE SPY WAR: SOVIETS HEAT IT UP

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Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP99-00498R000100050124-2
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RIPPUB
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K
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1
Document Creation Date: 
December 20, 2016
Sequence Number: 
124
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OPEN SOURCE
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2RTICLE;IP2 EARHI I ON PA GE 3y FRANK FASO and First of a series Approved For Release 2007/06/21: CIA-RDP99-00498R000100050124-2 IKE the iceman and the blacksmith, . the spy has become a- victim of : modern technology. Spy satellites and planes criss. 'rocs the skies, spy -ships and subma- ines prowl the seas. Well, not-exactly: Intelligence - collecting- machines luck coded messages out of the air and eed them to other machines to deci- her, analyze and evaluate. They solve i minutes coded -puzzles . that . might affle - human '--cryptographers for onths or years. Electronic eyes and ars keep track of .all:things great. and' mall - that=might. tilt'. the ,balance of.. iternational power..- They. . have forced :;thousands'.' of `'. cofessional - intelligence agents. into irly'retirement: Yet-James Bond still ves._ Old-fashioned- cloak-and-dagger >pionage may seem outmoded, but it is x from obsolete. America's CIA,.. Russia's KGB -and teir- smaller counterparts . are - still ghting the secret war in which spies -e the foot=soliders. A -machine flying gh above the earth can pinpoint the tact location of a new defense plant or .issile site, - but only someone inside e place can find out exactly. what's ippening there. - - Two recent cases 9f Soviet espionage the United State- prove conclusively Lat guys on the ground are as essential. the intelligence industry.as spies In. The first .case involves two Russian emigrants, : -.Ivan -- Nikoronovich. `. Ro- ilsky, _34; and Paul S.--Negrasov,- 45. ederal -agents describe Rogalsky 'as a ry employed by the. Soviet' secret serv- e, KGl3: He..allegedly -tried to per Lade Negrasov to steal defense secrets - ?om: the space center -where Negrasov orks. - :.,; : , .. ~. _ Rogalsky was a sailor in the Soviet .erchant marine when he jumped ship Germany In. 1971: - He eventually . ade his way to the -United. States and scame a permanent resident alien. He - rifted around the -country from New .: ork (where he lived in the Bronx) to alifornia,-- from Florida :_to - Aiaska,-: orking as an auto mechanic. - - .Two -years age;. he--moved-into, a-- iral community o#- about* a -hundred. Thite- Russian'--families- in-- Jackson ownship; -NJ-, 25 miles-'east ' of Tren in..Investigators :believe: he was plant-: i there- by the KGB.;to - spy.- on the ussian exiles. He left -Jackson - Town- tip in 1975 for a trip-toAlaska and the test Coast. ,:_: `r. .On. Nov- 26,' 1975, he met Negrasov a-party in San Francisco- Negrasov . as then employed as; an? engineer. at ord Aerospace Communications in Palo - Ito,: Calif.,.a- major defense contractor-: ,r the - U.S... government..-Rn?alskv.; N9'1 YORK DAILY NEWS 26 ,i A_NUARY 1977 . '-Suspecting that: Iif inquisitive new friend was a spy, Negrasov reported l their conversation to the FBI. He was i told to -play. along 'and see what Ro- galsky had in mind. .. . - . Last July, Negrasov : switched jobs and became a.senior?project engineer at the RCA ' Astro. Electronics Division near Aightstown. N.J. _A naturalized American citizen and'a highly regarded -scientist, he -was -'given - top security clearance and began working on secret Pentagon projects. His duties included designing power systems for computers and instruments for space satellites. -- Rogalsky, who was once again living In - Jackson - -Township, - contacted - Ne- grasov at the tatter's home in-Lake-- .wood,-NJ., and suggested that he could supplement his income- by selling- data. ::on space equipment; FBI agents. then instructed the engi veer to feed unclassified information to EGRASOV started slipping doeu. meets to-Rogalsky last October.' On Nov. 7, Rogalsky revealed that his KGB contact was Yev- tary of the Soviet delegation to the United Nations. The FBI had long sus- pected that Karpov was a KGB agent and had placed him under surveillance to. obtain secret papers dealing- with satellite communications systems. :"I don't-know if I can get them," Negrasov said. "What if we get caught?" ' - - _ Rogalsky assured the engineer that, ,it anything went wrong, a Soviet ship would be waiting to pick them up. off titled: "Statement-of working investiga- tion. of -.special-- techniques related . to satellite communications." arrested by. FBI agents. on, a charge-.of., ;: 3#?convicted;_be vouid:be.executed.' not be arrested because of his diplomat- ic immunity. The government is expect- ed to boot him back to Russia. On Jan. 6, the day before Rogalsky was s,Zzed; Mexican security. police' { grabbed an American-'who had been seen with an official of the Soviet Embassy in Mexico City. The American, Andrew D. Lee, 25; of Palos Verdes Es- tates development -near Los Angeles, _ was carrying three rolls ' of microfilm containing copies of Top-Secret U.S. De- fense Department documents.- _,. Mexican authorities notified the FBI of their find.- Questioned-by American and Mexican counterspies,. Lee report- edly confessed that he and another been selling Pentagon -secrets to the Russians..:. .:_ Boyce, 23, a trusted employe of the giant TRN Corp., which-has millions of dollars worth of defense contracts, was arrested by the FBI at -his home in Palos Verdes. - -: - An'., FBI spokesman, said Lee and Boyce had collected $17,500:. for their.' efforts. They were charged with '.'con- - spiracy to commit espionage against the United States on behalf- of the Soviet Union" - ,_ According. to the bureau spokesman, the two suspects contacted a Soviet offi- cial last year and offered to sell impor- tant classified- information. When they proved they could deliver, the Russian . hired them. Lee 'was to deliver the :material stolen by Boyce. The-Russian --.gave Lee- a code name and put him in 1 touch with the KGB agent -whb would serve as his control officer. - :. Subsequently,-Lee made six rips to 'Mexico City and one to Viennatto un- ? meet.,: ? He became a- familiar-figure to the Mexican, security, officers -who -had the Soviet Embassy under surieillance, and . when he- showed up again this month, they. decided.to- give.him a toss.-Her was - i o h e was ab ut to p ss picked up just as microfilms to Borls._ =A. Grlshla, the c:ontinuLA. STAT STA ' Approved For Release 2007/06/21 : CIA-RDP99-00498R000100050124-2